Infectious Disease

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Transcript Infectious Disease

Infectious
Diseases
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Disease
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Genetic
Biological
Physical
Chemical
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Infectious Diseases - Definitions
• Disease – a pathological condition of body parts
or tissues characterized by an identifiable group of
signs and symptoms.
• Infectious disease – disease caused by an
infectious agent such as a bacterium, virus,
protozoan, or fungus that can be passed on to
others.
• Infection – occurs when an infectious agent
enters the body and begins to reproduce; may or
may not lead to disease.
• Pathogen – an infectious agent that causes
disease.
• Host – an organism infected by another organism.
• Virulence – the relative ability of an agent to
cause rapid and severe disease in a host.
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Koch’s Postulates
•
Koch developed four criteria to demonstrate that a specific disease is caused by
a particular agent.
1. The specific agent must be associated
with every case of the disease.
2. The agent must be isolated from a diseased host
and grown in culture.
3. When the culture-grown agent is introduced into
a healthy susceptible host, the agent must cause
the same disease.
4. The same agent must again be isolated from the
infected experimental host.
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Infectious Disease Agents
• Most infectious agents that cause
disease are microscopic in size and thus,
are called microbes or microorganisms.
• Different groups of agents that cause
disease are:
– Bacteria
– Viruses
– Protozoa (Protists)
– Fungi
– Helminths (Animals)
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Infectious Diseases Throughout
History
• Infectious agents have probably always caused
disease in humans.
• Smallpox has been described in ancient
Egyptian and Chinese writings and may have
been responsible for more deaths than all other
infectious diseases combined.
• There is evidence that malaria and poliomyelitis
have existed since ancient times.
• In the 14th Century, the bubonic plague, or Black
Death, killed about 20 million people in Europe
alone.
• In the 20th Century, the 1918 influenza may have
killed up to 50 million people worldwide
• Close to 20 million people have died of AIDS to
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date.
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Courtesy of CDC
Recreated 1918
Influenza virions.
The 1918 Spanish
flu killed more than
500,000 people in
the United States
and up to 50 million
worldwide.
Smallpox
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How Infectious Agents
Cause Disease
• Production of poisons,
such as toxins and
enzymes, that destroy
cells and tissues.
• Direct invasion and
destruction of host cells.
• Triggering responses from
the host’s immune system
leading to disease signs
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and symptoms.
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Courtesy of CDC
Human
Immunodeficiency Virus.
HIV-1 virions can be seen
on surface of
lymphocytes.
Phases of Infectious Disease
• Incubation period – time between infection and
the appearance of signs and symptoms.
• Prodromal phase – mild, nonspecific symptoms
that signal onset of some diseases.
• Clinical phase – a person experiences typical
signs and symptoms of disease.
• Decline phase - subsidence of symptoms.
• Recovery phase – symptoms have
disappeared, tissues heal, and the body regains
strength.
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Classification of Infectious Disease
• By duration
– Acute – develops and runs its course quickly.
– Chronic – develops more slowly and is usually less severe, but
may persist for a long, indefinite period of time.
– Latent – characterized by periods of no symptoms between
outbreaks of illness.
• By location
– Local – confined to a specific area of the body.
– Systemic – a generalized illness that infects most of the body
with pathogens distributed widely in tissues.
• By timing
– Primary – initial infection in a previously healthy person.
– Secondary – infection that occurs in a person weakened by a
primary infection.
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Influenza
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Example of an Infectious Disease - Flu
• Acute contagious disease caused by the
influenza virus.
• Respiratory tract infection, but symptoms felt
throughout entire body.
• Epidemics occur seasonally with low fatality;
more deadly pandemics occur several times each
century.
• Highly changeable virus that can infect multiple
species, including humans, pigs, and birds.
• Concern exists that current avian flu will lead to a
new pandemic.
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Transmission of Infectious
Diseases
• Agents that cause infectious diseases
can be transmitted in many ways.
– Through the air
– Through contaminated food or water
– Through body fluids
– By direct contact with contaminated
objects
– By animal vectors such as insects,
birds, bats, etc.
Courtesy of VOA
Chinese students
wearing masks during a
SARS outbreak
Courtesy of CDC
Aedes aegypti mosquito
Known to transmit
Dengue fever
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Related Terms
• Endemic/Enzootic: The constant presence of a
disease or infectious agent within a given
geographic area.
• Epidemic/Epizootic: The occurrence in an area
of a disease or illness in excess of what may be
expected on the basis of past experience for a
given population (in the case of a new disease,
such as AIDS, any occurrence may be
considered "epidemic").
• Pandemic/Panzootic: A worldwide epidemic
affecting an exceptionally high proportion of the
global population.
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Example of an Infectious Disease
- AIDS
• AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome) is the disease caused by
the virus called HIV (human
immunodeficiency virus).
• HIV attacks cells of the immune system
and destroys their ability to fight
infection by other agents.
• HIV is spread through the direct
exchange of body fluids.
• There is a long period of time from HIV
infection to the onset of AIDS.
• Anti-HIV drugs prolong the length and
quality of life, but there is no vaccine or
cure for AIDS.
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Courtesy of CDC
This highly magnified
transmission electron
micrographic (TEM)
image revealed the
presence of mature forms
of the human virus
immunodeficiency (HIV)
in a tissue sample under
investigation.
Reducing the Spread of
Infectious Diseases
• Vaccines
• Antimicrobial drugs
• Good personal hygiene
and sanitation
• Protection against mosquitoes
• Quarantine
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Infectious Diseases as a Cause
of Death
• Infectious diseases are responsible for a quarter to a
third of all deaths worldwide.
• Infectious diseases account for more than half of all
deaths in children under the age of 5.
• Of the top ten causes of death compiled by the World
Health Organization, five are due to infectious diseases.
• The top single agent killers are HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis. The other top killers are lower respiratory
infections and diarrheal diseases, which are caused by a
variety of agents.
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Emerging Infectious Diseases
• Emerging diseases are those that have recently
appeared within a population, or whose incidence or
geographic range is increasing rapidly.
• Diseases can emerge or re-emerge due to:
– appearance of a previously unknown agent.
– evolution of a new infectious agent.
– spread of an infectious agent to a new host.
– spread of an infectious agent to new locations.
– acquisition of resistance to anti-microbial drugs.
– deliberate introduction into a population.
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Re-emerging and Emerging
Infectious Disease
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Climate Change
• A New Factor in Infectious Disease
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Barriers to Treatment
• Political leadership
• Socio-cultural factors
• Biological research
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